Kamis, 12 Juni 2014

Modernist American Poetry on Anecdote of The Jar by Wallace Stevens


In the Modern Period, we begin to see writers and poets finding new ways to look at relatively common objects.  “Anecdote of the Jar” by Wallace Stevens is one of the examples of this. Wallace Stevens (October 2, 1879 – August 2, 1955) was an American Modernist poet.  He wrote the Anecdote of The Jar in 1919. The narrator places a common household object, which is a jar on a hill.  The jar has a rather poor effect on the surrounding countryside: it tames the wilderness and drives away the flora and fauna of Tennessee.

In the poem, Anecdote of the Jar, Stevens portrays the complex relationship of human to nature through confusion of who is greater than whom, how they depend on each other, the connection between the two, and the form the poem is written in. Stevens forces the reader to feel the confusion and chaos present between the jar (a symbol for humans) and nature. This relationship can be felt and read through the form the poem is written in.
         We can see the connection of humans to the natural world through the first and last lines of the poem. These two lines embody the poem to start and finish in a calm way. Both end in the word Tennessee. This can show the relationship outline as being simple. Just as the port went above all the chaos, the outline of the poem goes around the chaos The first line of the poem is the beginning of the relationship. This opens the reader in a confusing state to figure out what Stevens is really trying to get across. This mass confusion is the body of the relationship. Somewhere in the poem, Stevens shows in a deeper meaning of the relationship through a connection. As the poem nears the end, the same word is used to end the poem. That is the end of the relationship; there is no more to be added. It leaves the reader feeling satisfied, even if he or she didn't understand the content of the poem.
Through the simple use of metaphor, Stevens has created a masterful work in the Modernist tradition.  This poem address the issues of metaphor and fragmentation as well as other modernist poems. Related to the theme of destruction is the theme of fragmentation. Fragmentation in modernist literature is thematic, as well as formal. Plot, characters, theme, images, and narrative form itself are broken.  The fragmentation used in this poem also being used to demonstrate the chaotic state of modern existence.

All in all, Stevens truly does a wonderful job of portraying the relationship of humans to nature. By using the jar to represent man, he was successful in creating an environment not only expressed in the poem, but also felt by the reader. He used irregular rhymes and role changes to express the complex relationship. The reader is left with confusion but a slight understanding of the relationship. Stevens expressed the relationship of humans to nature very well m this piece of work.

References:

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar